The Province

Rip out bike lanes before more cyclists get hurt

- Lawrence Solomon Lawrence Solomon is executive director of Urban Renaissanc­e Institute, a division of Energy Probe Research Foundation. @LSolomonTw­eets lsolomon@postmedia.com

Cyclists are at high risk when they’re on the road. Accident rates per kilometre are 26 to 48 times higher for bikes than for automobile­s, according to Ontario’s Share the Road Cycling Coalition.

The culprits are many, but three in particular stand out: careless motorists oblivious to those with whom they share the road; inexperien­ced cyclists who have no business being on the road; and reckless politician­s and planners who build bike lanes as vanity projects.

Politician­s promote bike lanes largely because inexperien­ced cyclists feel safer on them. Feeling safer, they are more likely to attempt commuting by bike. But there’s a difference between feeling safer and being safer. Many, if not most, bike lanes increase the odds of an accident, particular­ly since inexperien­ced cyclists are ill-equipped to understand the hazards they face.

Bike lanes, with their false promise of safety, lure the inexperien­ced onto roads, and some inevitably to their death.

Experience­d cyclists and cycling advocacy organizati­ons have often argued against dedicated cycling paths. In one study, the German Cyclists’ Union, ADFC, noted cyclists in the Netherland­s are involved in 40 per cent of all traffic accidents while accounting for only 27 per cent of travel, despite a proliferat­ion of bicycle lanes.

In Germany, which has far fewer bike lanes, the proportion of accidents was lower. The ADFC’s position — like that of many others — is that cyclists who know what they’re doing are safer in traffic among cars than in bike lanes alongside them.

That message, however, is not commonplac­e. Many cycling advocacy organizati­ons are now captive to government funding and the cycling industry — which rightly understand­s that bicycle lanes benefit its bottom line. A case in point is the League of American Bicyclists, a venerable cycling NGO, which a decade ago purged its board of bikelane dissenters and now more represents the interests of bicycle sellers and planners.

Unbundling the stats shows why — all else being equal — it is a no-brainer cyclists should share the same lanes as motorized vehicles. Relatively few accidents occur when impatient motorists overtake slower-moving bicycles in their lane: just seven per cent of bike-car collisions occur this way.

The overwhelmi­ng proportion of bike-car accidents — 89 per cent in one study — occur during turning or crossing, generally at intersecti­ons. If the bicycle is in its own lane, it faces additional threats from automobile­s turning right across the bicycle lane.

An additional threat also occurs mid-block, at driveways, when autos pulling into traffic making left-hand turns must dart across the bike lane and the adjacent car lane to turn left into the far lane, requiring the driver to judge traffic coming from two directions in three lanes. Put another way, by some measures, bike lanes make cycling safer in seven per cent of car-bike situations but more dangerous in 89 per cent. Not a good ratio.

Yet, because bike paths are fashionabl­e, municipal politician­s compete with each other to remake their cities as “world-class cycling cities,” often at great expense, to serve a small segment of the population (typically just one or two per cent of commuters cycle) that for the most part lacks the ability to ride safely.

According to the Bicycle Federation of America, fewer than five per cent of cyclists would qualify as experience­d or highly skilled bicyclists. In effect, municipal cycling policy is being driven by cycling incompeten­ts, leading to increased risks and limited freedom for the roadworthy cyclist since many jurisdicti­ons with bike lanes require cyclists to keep off car lanes.

Cycling is serious, life-and-death business, and is becoming more so as cycling ridership expands. It should be treated as such: by licensing cyclists after they’ve learned the rules of the road and demonstrat­ed their on-road competence, just as other vehicle owners must; by requiring their vehicles to be insured and roadworthy through headlamps, reflectors and brakes; and by strictly policing their behaviour.

“There is no substitute for cycling competence; competence reduces the cyclist accident rate by about 75 per cent,” states John Forester, a leading American authority on cycling safety.

Cyclists aren’t alone in needing discipline. For them to share the road, those they’re sharing it with — motorists — need discipline as well, to accept cyclists as equally entitled to the road. Police should crack down on unruly motorists, including those who display impatience at cyclists they perceive to be slowing them down.

Politician­s and planners need discipline, too, to focus on real rather than perceived safety needs. Bike lane budgets should be redirected to safety at intersecti­ons, including through technology that identifies unfit motorists and enforcemen­t that chastens them — 44 per cent of intersecti­on accidents are caused by the driver’s carelessne­ss.

Because cycling is inherently more dangerous than driving, anyone who decides to cycle rather than drive faces an elevated risk. Bike-lane propaganda by politician­s and planners won’t reduce that risk. Education and enforcemen­t, for cyclists and motorists alike, will.

 ??  ?? Dedicated bicycle lanes cause more accidents than they prevent, writes Lawrence Solomon, because they encourage more bad cyclists to take to the streets. They also create more headaches for motorists trying to turn across these dedicated lanes. — NICK...
Dedicated bicycle lanes cause more accidents than they prevent, writes Lawrence Solomon, because they encourage more bad cyclists to take to the streets. They also create more headaches for motorists trying to turn across these dedicated lanes. — NICK...

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